Agreement Ends All Pending and Future Litigation, Provides Clear Path for Long-Term Viable Health Care for the Community, SUNY to Exit Operations by May 2014

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, SUNY Chairman H. Carl McCall, and Mayor Bill de Blasio today announced a settlement agreement with the parties involved in the Long Island College Hospital litigation that ends all pending and future litigation and allows SUNY to exit operations of the facility no later than May 2014 without interference, while providing an agreed upon process to deliver a viable long-term health care solution for the community.

The win-win agreement resolves all outstanding issues regarding the selection process for a new provider for health care services in the LICH community. The community and elected officials have agreed to participate under an expedited RFP submission process, followed by a seven day selection period. The agreement requires court approval.

“Today's agreement is a victory for all parties involved and paves the way for putting a long-term, sustainable health care facility in place for the residents of Brooklyn,” Governor Cuomo said. “We are in the midst of a health care transformation here in New York State, and the reality is that yesterday's costly, inefficient models of delivering service are no longer viable options for tomorrow. Under the terms of today's agreement, SUNY is reopening the solicitation process to find a new operator for LICH that will guide the facility as it modernizes and continues its important mission of serving New Yorkers.”

“We have finally achieved a solution in Brooklyn that will provide the viable health care outcome that SUNY and others have long advocated for the community, and I commend Chancellor Zimpher and her team for their work in delivering this positive outcome,” said SUNY Chairman H. Carl McCall. “Importantly, it ensures New York's system of public higher education can once again return to its core academic mission in support of our half million students, world-class faculty, and the communities we serve across the entire state. We have agreed to an expedited reopening of the RFP process because it was clear that this was the only way to end the costly and unproductive legal proceedings and was therefore in the best interest of SUNY. We are grateful the community groups have coalesced around this settlement and have agreed to participate in this important process to determine their own health care future. We would also like to extend deep thanks and gratitude to all of the previous bidders and urge them to resubmit their proposals. We also thank the elected leaders, and the community and labor groups that support this global settlement. SUNY always believed the solution to the crisis at LICH would be achieved outside a courtroom and through meaningful and respectful dialogue between the parties. Our aim continues to be the stabilization of our vital Brooklyn medical school at SUNY Downstate and University Hospital. We will continue to work with our community and government partners as we follow our state approved Sustainability Plan to achieve these goals.”

"For months we were told the free-fall closure of Long Island College was inevitable. We fought back. We went to court to keep the padlocks off the doors. We fought shoulder to shoulder with this community and used all the tools of City government to press for a better outcome. And now, we have a resolution that finally puts people's health first," said New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio. "This agreement represents the culmination of all the tremendous work by nurses and doctors, neighborhood associations, patients and elected officials who refused to back down. This is an outcome that we couldn't have achieved without the commitment of Governor Cuomo and SUNY, and I thank them for helping achieve this resolution. Protecting continuity of care and ensuring the healthcare needs of this community are met will now be the yardstick by which proposals for the future of LICH are measured. There is more work ahead, but we are closer than ever to the long-term, sustainable solution all of us have sought."

With unsustainable losses of $13 million a month, liabilities in excess of half a billion dollars, and endless and costly litigation, SUNY determined that this agreement was the only course to protect students and SUNY campuses across the State of New York from continued exposure to the mounting fiscal crisis at LICH. SUNY has fought from the beginning to preserve health care services in the community and this agreement achieves that goal with the full support of all stakeholders.

SUNY has received strong proposals in the previous solicitation that have the broad support from elected officials and many community and religious groups. SUNY thanks all of these individuals and the groups they represent for their support and urges them to continue to take part in this process.

Previous qualified bidders are also strongly encouraged to resubmit their proposals.

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About the State University of New YorkThe State University of New York is the largest comprehensive system of higher education in the United States, with 64 college and university campuses located within 30 miles of every home, school, and business in the state. As of Fall 2017, more than 430,000 students were enrolled in a degree program at a SUNY campus. In total, SUNY served nearly 1.4 million students in credit-bearing courses and programs, continuing education, and community outreach programs in the 2016-17 academic year. SUNY students and faculty across the state make significant contributions to research and discovery, resulting in $1 billion of externally sponsored activity each year. There are 3 million SUNY alumni worldwide, and one in three New Yorkers with a college degree is a SUNY alum. To learn more about how SUNY creates opportunity, visit www.suny.edu.